You are here

World

UK experts stumped by WWII pigeon message

|Published — Saturday 24 November 2012

LONDON: British intelligence officials are baffled by a secret World War II message that was discovered on the leg of a dead pigeon, they admitted yesterday. The message, consisting of 27 hand-written blocks of five letters, was attached to a pigeon skeleton that was found by retired probation officer David Martin when he was renovating his house in Surrey, southeast England.Martin handed the piece of paper to experts at intelligence agency GCHQ at the start of November, and they have been scratching their heads ever since. Codebreakers said the message, which did not include a date, was impossible to crack without its codebook.Written on a small sheet of paper headed “Pigeon Service,” the code was found in a small red canister and listed the sender as “Sjt W Stot.” The recipient is named as “X02.”A GCHQ spokesman said: “Although it is disappointing that we cannot yet read the message brought back by a brave carrier pigeon, it is a tribute to the skills of the wartime code-makers that, despite working under severe pressure, they devised a code that was indecipherable both then and now.”

LONDON: British intelligence officials are baffled by a secret World War II message that was discovered on the leg of a dead pigeon, they admitted yesterday. The message, consisting of 27 hand-written blocks of five letters, was attached to a pigeon skeleton that was found by retired probation officer David Martin when he was renovating his house in Surrey, southeast England.Martin handed the piece of paper to experts at intelligence agency GCHQ at the start of November, and they have been scratching their heads ever since. Codebreakers said the message, which did not include a date, was impossible to crack without its codebook.Written on a small sheet of paper headed “Pigeon Service,” the code was found in a small red canister and listed the sender as “Sjt W Stot.” The recipient is named as “X02.”A GCHQ spokesman said: “Although it is disappointing that we cannot yet read the message brought back by a brave carrier pigeon, it is a tribute to the skills of the wartime code-makers that, despite working under severe pressure, they devised a code that was indecipherable both then and now.”